PXG’s new Stick’em Forged wedges deliver tour-inspired feel and consistency. Triple-forged 8620 steel, high toe weighting, optimized grooves and versatile grinds give golfers more spin, stability and confidence around the green.
What Morikawa is essentially doing is an extreme version of soft-stepping – the practice of installing a shaft from a longer club into a shorter one to produce a softer, more flexible feel.
The 2026 Tour Edge Hot Launch Max family brings easier launch, forgiveness and affordability to developing golfers with drivers, fairway woods, hybrids, irons and wedges.
Buying new wedges is one of those moments when nuance actually matters. Loft is easy. Grind gets a lot of attention. But bounce? That’s where shots are saved – or quietly ruined.
The Cleveland CBZ marks the fifth generation of the company’s cavity back wedges, and this newest model charts a fresh path forward in feel by employing the same Z-alloy found in the company’s tour-played RTZ line.
If you’re currently playing a pitching wedge from the iron set you purchased but the idea of trying out a blade version has piqued your interest, just make sure you’re taking a few things into consideration.
Cobra’s latest King line of wedges uses a metal-injection moulding process that produces tighter manufacturing tolerances, reducing the need for hand polishing that can lead to inconsistencies from club to club.
The PGA Tour’s Las Vegas stop has become a preview of what’s to come in the gear industry – and this year is no different. Titleist’s 2025 Pro V1 and Pro V1x balls made their every-other-year appearance early in the week. Odyssey debuted a myriad of Ai-One putter head shapes. Bettinardi entered the zero-torque game. Read more…